I thought it would be nice to
revisit Mystic River, a remarkable movie and still a big favourite among
Eastwood fans. Here is Kenneth Turan’s review from The Los Angeles Times (Oct
10th, 2003) which I think summarises the film rather perfectly. Hard
to believe this was 15 years ago.
Mystic River is a major American
motion picture, an overpowering piece of work that involves some of the most
basic human emotions: love, hate, fear, revenge, despair. Directed by Clint
Eastwood with absolute confidence and remarkable control, it owes both its
success and its significance to the way it seamlessly unites elements that are
difficult to pull off on their own, much less together.
"Mystic River" is
simultaneously an intricate and gripping crime story that involves child
molestation and murder, and a thoughtful and disturbing emotional drama about
the nightmarish past sending destructive tentacles into the present.
This is a major studio release
that deals with the kind of dark and disconcerting material Hollywood usually
tries to avoid. It's a star vehicle that provides memorable roles for half a
dozen major players (Sean Penn, Tim Robbins, Kevin Bacon, Laurence Fishburne,
Marcia Gay Harden, Laura Linney), yet also takes pains to cast even the smallest
speaking parts with care.
It has both impeccable source
material (Dennis Lehane's persuasive best seller) and a spare and impressive
adaptation by Brian Helgeland that makes the difficult work of finding the film
inside the book look simple and inevitable. And despite a respect for language
that extends to the use of key dialogue from the book, "Mystic River"
is faultlessly cinematic and a model of classic directorial style.
Best of all, "Mystic
River" has Eastwood, an unflappable old master invigorated by the
challenges inherent in the material. He's dealing with themes of masculinity
and violence that have concerned him for decades, with emotions he understands
from the inside, and venturing into deeper and murkier emotional currents than
he's ever attempted before. What results also is Eastwood's best direction
since "Unforgiven" and arguably the best, most mature work of his
career.
Everything starts with Lehane's
strong and economically written book, a breakthrough stand-alone novel coming
after a series of five private eye books. "I was living with 'Mystic
River' for 10 years before I wrote it," the author told Publishers Weekly,
and that undoubtedly accounts for the subtlety and intricacy of its psychology,
the way it gets to more emotion than is usual for a police procedural.
Set in a hard world where
"the worst things did, in fact, sometimes happen," Lehane's is a
story that understands life's fatal randomness, that explores how misplaced
suspicions, unresolved hatreds, missed opportunities and shattering
misunderstandings can color already complex situations where no one is really
innocent and everyone lives with their own complicity.
"Mystic River" also is
a story, on the page and on the screen, with an exact sense of place. Its aura
of been-there atmosphere centers on the Boston neighbourhood of East Buckingham
where the film was shot, a working class area, close by the Mystic River, also
known as the Flats. "The Flats," Lehane wrote, "were nothing but
a small town wrapped within a big city."
The drama begins with a critical
extended flashback, set a quarter of a century in the past, a lazy late
afternoon moment that finds 11-year-old pals Dave, Sean and Jimmy playing
street hockey on a deserted stretch of pavement.
But, as moodily captured by
cinematographer Tom Stern, even the most innocent-seeming city moments have an
intangible edge of menace about them. A car pulls up, a man presenting himself
as a police officer gets out and rousts the boys for a minor infraction. Dave
is ordered into the car and suddenly, things get very dark very fast.
"Ever think," Jimmy is to say decades later, "how one little
choice can change a person's life?" Can change, it turns out, everyone's
lives.
In an instant, it is 25 years
later and the boys, still in Boston but no longer close ("now it's just
hello around the neighbourhood"), now are adults with families,
responsibilities. Dave (Tim Robbins), inevitably, is the one the past has
affected most. Still living in the neighbourhood though married to the timid
Celeste (Marcia Gay Harden) and with a son of his own, Dave Boyle has a sense
of darkness and sadness around him that is so deep it seems to have swallowed
the boy we saw without a trace. Of all the actors, Robbins has changed himself
most for this role, taking on a strong Boston accent and changing his usual
confident body language to play a haunted, interior man.
Work, at least, has taken Sean
Devine (Kevin Bacon) a little farther away. He's become a "statie," a
homicide detective working for the Massachusetts State Police, but he too has
personal problems. Six months ago, his wife left; his only contact with her are
random telephone interludes where she calls, stays on the line, but won't
speak.
The role of Sean is the least
showy of the three major characters, and it is the one most cut down from the
novel, but it is essential as an anchor for the plot and for the audience to
hold onto. Bacon does an expert job getting us involved in the critical choices
and decisions of, in Lehane's words, "a guy the world has always worked
for."
Sean is reluctantly pulled back
to the old neighbourhood and his boyhood experiences when he and his partner
Whitey (Laurence Fishburne) are assigned to investigate a crime in East
Buckingham. It's a murder connected to the third of the boyhood pals, Jimmy
Markum, a murder that will draw all three men closer together in unexpected and
ultimately horrific ways.
As played by Sean Penn, Jimmy is
the inevitable center of the story. Even as a child, Lehane writes, "if he
was aware there were rules -- in the subway, on the streets, in a movie theater
-- he never showed it," and that making-your-own-law quality still defines
him though now he's the twice-married father of three daughters who owns a
neighbourhood convenience store called the Cottage Market.
With a look that could pass
through steel, a temper like the devil's wrath, and the hawk-like presence of a
predator, Penn's Jimmy sits astride his world like a god of vengeance,
terrifying even in repose. When he's not in repose, you'd better just get the
hell out of the way.
The other above-the-line actors
-- Harden as the mouse-like Celeste, Fishburne as the unrelenting detective and
especially Linney as Jimmy's implacable wife Annabeth -- are equally
impressive, as is Eli Wallach in a juicy unbilled cameo as a liquor store
owner.
But "Mystic River,"
exactly cast by Phyllis Huffman, also is a film where you notice how even the
actors in smaller roles are just right, people like Emmy Rossum as Jimmy's
daughter Katie, Susan Willis as an elderly key witness, and Kevin Chapman as
Val Savage, one of a trio of brothers known around the neighbourhood, not
without reason, as "legends of psychosis."
The mastery -- and there really
is no other word for it -- Eastwood demonstrates in this, the 24th feature he's
directed, was not easily won and did not come at the end of an unbroken string
of triumphs. But there can be no doubt that it's here. "It's as good as I
can do," the director said in a quiet moment before the film was shown at
Cannes, but it's more than that. It's as good as anybody can do.
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